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515 lines
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515 lines
16 KiB
Metadata-Version: 2.1
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Name: json-tricks
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Version: 3.17.3
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Summary: Extra features for Python's JSON: comments, order, numpy, pandas, datetimes, and many more! Simple but customizable.
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Home-page: https://github.com/mverleg/pyjson_tricks
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Author: Mark V
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Author-email: markv.nl.dev@gmail.com
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Maintainer: Mark V
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License: Revised BSD License (LICENSE.txt)
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Keywords: json,numpy,OrderedDict,comments,pandas,pytz,enum,encode,decode,serialize,deserialize
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Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
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Classifier: Development Status :: 6 - Mature
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Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
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Classifier: Natural Language :: English
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Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
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Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
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Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
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Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
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Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
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License-File: LICENSE.txt
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# JSON tricks (python)
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The [pyjson-tricks] package brings several pieces of
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functionality to python handling of json files:
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1. **Store and load numpy arrays** in human-readable format.
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2. **Store and load class instances** both generic and customized.
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3. **Store and load date/times** as a dictionary (including timezone).
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4. **Preserve map order** `{}` using `OrderedDict`.
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5. **Allow for comments** in json files by starting lines with `#`.
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6. Sets, complex numbers, Decimal, Fraction, enums, compression,
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duplicate keys, pathlib Paths, bytes ...
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As well as compression and disallowing duplicate keys.
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* Code: <https://github.com/mverleg/pyjson_tricks>
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* Documentation: <http://json-tricks.readthedocs.org/en/latest/>
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* PIP: <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/json_tricks>
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Several keys of the format `__keyname__` have special meanings, and more
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might be added in future releases.
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If you're considering JSON-but-with-comments as a config file format,
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have a look at [HJSON](https://github.com/hjson/hjson-py), it might be
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more appropriate. For other purposes, keep reading!
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Thanks for all the Github stars⭐!
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# Installation and use
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You can install using
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``` bash
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pip install json-tricks
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```
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Decoding of some data types needs the corresponding package to be
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installed, e.g. `numpy` for arrays, `pandas` for dataframes and `pytz`
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for timezone-aware datetimes.
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You can import the usual json functions dump(s) and load(s), as well as
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a separate comment removal function, as follows:
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``` bash
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from json_tricks import dump, dumps, load, loads, strip_comments
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```
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The exact signatures of these and other functions are in the [documentation](http://json-tricks.readthedocs.org/en/latest/#main-components).
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Quite some older versions of Python are supported. For an up-to-date list see [the automated tests](./.github/workflows/tests.yml).
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# Features
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## Numpy arrays
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When not compressed, the array is encoded in sort-of-readable and very
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flexible and portable format, like so:
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``` python
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arr = arange(0, 10, 1, dtype=uint8).reshape((2, 5))
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print(dumps({'mydata': arr}))
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```
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this yields:
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``` javascript
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{
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"mydata": {
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"dtype": "uint8",
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"shape": [2, 5],
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"Corder": true,
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"__ndarray__": [[0, 1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8, 9]]
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}
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}
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```
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which will be converted back to a numpy array when using
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`json_tricks.loads`. Note that the memory order (`Corder`) is only
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stored in v3.1 and later and for arrays with at least 2 dimensions.
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As you see, this uses the magic key `__ndarray__`. Don't use
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`__ndarray__` as a dictionary key unless you're trying to make a numpy
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array (and know what you're doing).
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Numpy scalars are also serialized (v3.5+). They are represented by the
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closest python primitive type. A special representation was not
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feasible, because Python's json implementation serializes some numpy
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types as primitives, without consulting custom encoders. If you want to
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preserve the exact numpy type, use
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[encode_scalars_inplace](https://json-tricks.readthedocs.io/en/latest/#json_tricks.np_utils.encode_scalars_inplace).
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There is also a compressed format (thanks `claydugo` for fix). From
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the next major release, this will be default when using compression.
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For now, you can use it as:
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``` python
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dumps(data, compression=True, properties={'ndarray_compact': True})
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```
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This compressed format encodes the array data in base64, with gzip
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compression for the array, unless 1) compression has little effect for
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that array, or 2) the whole file is already compressed. If you only want
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compact format for large arrays, pass the number of elements to
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`ndarray_compact`.
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Example:
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``` python
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data = [linspace(0, 10, 9), array([pi, exp(1)])]
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dumps(data, compression=False, properties={'ndarray_compact': 8})
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[{
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"__ndarray__": "b64.gz:H4sIAAAAAAAC/2NgQAZf7CE0iwOE5oPSIlBaEkrLQegGRShfxQEAz7QFikgAAAA=",
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"dtype": "float64",
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"shape": [9]
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}, {
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"__ndarray__": [3.141592653589793, 2.718281828459045],
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"dtype": "float64",
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"shape": [2]
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}]
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```
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## Class instances
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`json_tricks` can serialize class instances.
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If the class behaves normally (not generated dynamic, no `__new__` or
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`__metaclass__` magic, etc) *and* all it's attributes are serializable,
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then this should work by default.
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``` python
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# json_tricks/test_class.py
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class MyTestCls:
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def __init__(self, **kwargs):
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for k, v in kwargs.items():
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setattr(self, k, v)
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cls_instance = MyTestCls(s='ub', dct={'7': 7})
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json = dumps(cls_instance, indent=4)
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cls_instance_again = loads(json)
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```
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You'll get your instance back. Here the json looks like this:
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``` javascript
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{
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"__instance_type__": [
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"json_tricks.test_class",
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"MyTestCls"
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],
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"attributes": {
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"s": "ub",
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"dct": {
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"7": 7
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}
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}
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}
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```
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As you can see, this stores the module and class name. The class must be
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importable from the same module when decoding (and should not have
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changed). If it isn't, you have to manually provide a dictionary to
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`cls_lookup_map` when loading in which the class name can be looked up.
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Note that if the class is imported, then `globals()` is such a
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dictionary (so try `loads(json, cls_lookup_map=glboals())`). Also note
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that if the class is defined in the 'top' script (that you're calling
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directly), then this isn't a module and the import part cannot be
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extracted. Only the class name will be stored; it can then only be
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deserialized in the same script, or if you provide `cls_lookup_map`.
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Note that this also works with `slots` without having to do anything
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(thanks to `koffie` and `dominicdoty`), which encodes like this (custom
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indentation):
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``` javascript
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{
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"__instance_type__": ["module.path", "ClassName"],
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"slots": {"slotattr": 37},
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"attributes": {"dictattr": 42}
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}
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```
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If the instance doesn't serialize automatically, or if you want custom
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behaviour, then you can implement `__json__encode__(self)` and
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`__json_decode__(self, **attributes)` methods, like so:
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``` python
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class CustomEncodeCls:
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def __init__(self):
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self.relevant = 42
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self.irrelevant = 37
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def __json_encode__(self):
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# should return primitive, serializable types like dict, list, int, string, float...
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return {'relevant': self.relevant}
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def __json_decode__(self, **attrs):
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# should initialize all properties; note that __init__ is not called implicitly
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self.relevant = attrs['relevant']
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self.irrelevant = 12
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```
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As you've seen, this uses the magic key `__instance_type__`. Don't use
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`__instance_type__` as a dictionary key unless you know what you're
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doing.
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## Date, time, datetime and timedelta
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Date, time, datetime and timedelta objects are stored as dictionaries of
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"day", "hour", "millisecond" etc keys, for each nonzero property.
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Timezone name is also stored in case it is set, as is DST (thanks `eumir`).
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You'll need to have `pytz` installed to use timezone-aware date/times,
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it's not needed for naive date/times.
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``` javascript
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{
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"__datetime__": null,
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"year": 1988,
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"month": 3,
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"day": 15,
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"hour": 8,
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"minute": 3,
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"second": 59,
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"microsecond": 7,
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"tzinfo": "Europe/Amsterdam"
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}
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```
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This approach was chosen over timestamps for readability and consistency
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between date and time, and over a single string to prevent parsing
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problems and reduce dependencies. Note that if `primitives=True`,
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date/times are encoded as ISO 8601, but they won't be restored
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automatically.
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Don't use `__date__`, `__time__`, `__datetime__`, `__timedelta__` or
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`__tzinfo__` as dictionary keys unless you know what you're doing, as
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they have special meaning.
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## Order
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Given an ordered dictionary like this (see the tests for a longer one):
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``` python
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ordered = OrderedDict((
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('elephant', None),
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('chicken', None),
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('tortoise', None),
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))
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```
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Converting to json and back will preserve the order:
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``` python
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from json_tricks import dumps, loads
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json = dumps(ordered)
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ordered = loads(json, preserve_order=True)
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```
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where `preserve_order=True` is added for emphasis; it can be left out
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since it's the default.
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As a note on [performance](http://stackoverflow.com/a/8177061/723090),
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both dicts and OrderedDicts have the same scaling for getting and
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setting items (`O(1)`). In Python versions before 3.5, OrderedDicts were
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implemented in Python rather than C, so were somewhat slower; since
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Python 3.5 both are implemented in C. In summary, you should have no
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scaling problems and probably no performance problems at all, especially
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in Python 3. Python 3.6+ preserves order of dictionaries by default
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making this redundant, but this is an implementation detail that should
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not be relied on.
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## Comments
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*Warning: in the next major version, comment parsing will be opt-in, not
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default anymore (for performance reasons). Update your code now to pass
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`ignore_comments=True` explicitly if you want comment parsing.*
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This package uses `#` and `//` for comments, which seem to be the most
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common conventions, though only the latter is valid javascript.
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For example, you could call `loads` on the following string:
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{ # "comment 1
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"hello": "Wor#d", "Bye": ""M#rk"", "yes\\"": 5,# comment" 2
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"quote": ""th#t's" what she said", // comment "3"
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"list": [1, 1, "#", """, "\", 8], "dict": {"q": 7} #" comment 4 with quotes
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}
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// comment 5
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And it would return the de-commented version:
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``` javascript
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{
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"hello": "Wor#d", "Bye": ""M#rk"", "yes\\"": 5,
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"quote": ""th#t's" what she said",
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"list": [1, 1, "#", """, "\", 8], "dict": {"q": 7}
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}
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```
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Since comments aren't stored in the Python representation of the data,
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loading and then saving a json file will remove the comments (it also
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likely changes the indentation).
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The implementation of comments is a bit crude, which means that there are
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some exceptional cases that aren't handled correctly ([#57](https://github.com/mverleg/pyjson_tricks/issues/57)).
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It is also not very fast. For that reason, if `ignore_comments` wasn't
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explicitly set to True, then json-tricks first tries to parge without
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ignoring comments. If that fails, then it will automatically re-try
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with comment handling. This makes the no-comment case faster at the cost
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of the comment case, so if you are expecting comments make sure to set
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`ignore_comments` to True.
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## Other features
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* Special floats like `NaN`, `Infinity` and
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`-0` using the `allow_nan=True` argument
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([non-standard](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1423081/json-left-out-infinity-and-nan-json-status-in-ecmascript)
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json, may not decode in other implementations).
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* Sets are serializable and can be loaded. By default the set json
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representation is sorted, to have a consistent representation.
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* Save and load complex numbers (py3) with `1+2j` serializing as
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`{'__complex__': [1, 2]}`.
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* Save and load `Decimal` and `Fraction` (including NaN, infinity, -0
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for Decimal).
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* Save and load `Enum` (thanks to `Jenselme`), either built-in in
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python3.4+, or with the [enum34](https://pypi.org/project/enum34/)
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package in earlier versions. `IntEnum` needs
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[encode_intenums_inplace](https://json-tricks.readthedocs.io/en/latest/#json_tricks.utils.encode_intenums_inplace).
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* `json_tricks` allows for gzip compression using the
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`compression=True` argument (off by default).
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* `json_tricks` can check for duplicate keys in maps by setting
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`allow_duplicates` to False. These are [kind of
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allowed](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/21832701/does-json-syntax-allow-duplicate-keys-in-an-object),
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but are handled inconsistently between json implementations. In
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Python, for `dict` and `OrderedDict`, duplicate keys are silently
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overwritten.
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* Save and load `pathlib.Path` objects (e.g., the current path,
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`Path('.')`, serializes as `{"__pathlib__": "."}`)
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(thanks to `bburan`).
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* Save and load bytes (python 3+ only), which will be encoded as utf8 if
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that is valid, or as base64 otherwise. Base64 is always used if
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primitives are requested. Serialized as
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`[{"__bytes_b64__": "aGVsbG8="}]` vs `[{"__bytes_utf8__": "hello"}]`.
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* Save and load slices (thanks to `claydugo`).
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# Preserve type vs use primitive
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By default, types are encoded such that they can be restored to their
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original type when loaded with `json-tricks`. Example encodings in this
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documentation refer to that format.
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You can also choose to store things as their closest primitive type
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(e.g. arrays and sets as lists, decimals as floats). This may be
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desirable if you don't care about the exact type, or you are loading
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the json in another language (which doesn't restore python types).
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It's also smaller.
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To forego meta data and store primitives instead, pass `primitives` to
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`dump(s)`. This is available in version `3.8` and later. Example:
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``` python
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data = [
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arange(0, 10, 1, dtype=int).reshape((2, 5)),
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datetime(year=2017, month=1, day=19, hour=23, minute=00, second=00),
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1 + 2j,
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Decimal(42),
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Fraction(1, 3),
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MyTestCls(s='ub', dct={'7': 7}), # see later
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set(range(7)),
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]
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# Encode with metadata to preserve types when decoding
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print(dumps(data))
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```
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``` javascript
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// (comments added and indenting changed)
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[
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// numpy array
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{
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"__ndarray__": [
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[0, 1, 2, 3, 4],
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[5, 6, 7, 8, 9]],
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"dtype": "int64",
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"shape": [2, 5],
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"Corder": true
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},
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// datetime (naive)
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{
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"__datetime__": null,
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"year": 2017,
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"month": 1,
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"day": 19,
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"hour": 23
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},
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// complex number
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{
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"__complex__": [1.0, 2.0]
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},
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// decimal & fraction
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{
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"__decimal__": "42"
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},
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{
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"__fraction__": true
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"numerator": 1,
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"denominator": 3,
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},
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// class instance
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{
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"__instance_type__": [
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"tests.test_class",
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"MyTestCls"
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],
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"attributes": {
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"s": "ub",
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"dct": {"7": 7}
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}
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},
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// set
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{
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"__set__": [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
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}
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]
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```
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``` python
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# Encode as primitive types; more simple but loses type information
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print(dumps(data, primitives=True))
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```
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``` javascript
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// (comments added and indentation changed)
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[
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// numpy array
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[[0, 1, 2, 3, 4],
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[5, 6, 7, 8, 9]],
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// datetime (naive)
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"2017-01-19T23:00:00",
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// complex number
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[1.0, 2.0],
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// decimal & fraction
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42.0,
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0.3333333333333333,
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// class instance
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{
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"s": "ub",
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"dct": {"7": 7}
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},
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// set
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[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
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]
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```
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Note that valid json is produced either way: ``json-tricks`` stores meta data as normal json, but other packages probably won't interpret it.
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Note that valid json is produced either way: `json-tricks` stores meta
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data as normal json, but other packages probably won't interpret it.
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# Usage & contributions
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Code is under [Revised BSD License](LICENSE.txt)
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so you can use it for most purposes including commercially.
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Contributions are very welcome! Bug reports, feature suggestions and
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code contributions help this project become more useful for everyone!
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There is a short [contribution
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guide](CONTRIBUTING.md).
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Contributors not yet mentioned: `janLo` (performance boost).
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# Tests
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Tests are run automatically for commits to the repository for all
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supported versions. This is the status:
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![image](https://github.com/mverleg/pyjson_tricks/workflows/pyjson-tricks/badge.svg?branch=master)
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To run the tests manually for your version, see [this guide](tests/run_locally.md).
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